- Jun 13, 2016
- 119
- Pool Size
- 20000
- Surface
- Vinyl
- Chlorine
- Salt Water Generator
- SWG Type
- Pentair Intellichlor IC-40
I'm in MN and we drain our Intellifo (remove drain plugs) in the fall, no issues leaving it out all winter.
I understand how a variable speed motor works and how to control one. I also do not consider the iphone the pinnacle or phone technologybut that is a whole different matter
I do not understand the plumbing terminology you mentioned so I will have to read up on those.
However I understand that a pump has a goal to move so much water every day. It can do it in a matter of hours at the maximum speed, or take the whole day at a lower speed... In principle one would think the energy required to move so much water is the same and does not matter how much time it takes, but there is evidently a physical reason why going slower is more efficient. Maybe less friction in the pipes if water goes slow?
But what do these equations really tell us? For one thing, a reduction in speed has a proportional reduction in flow rate but has a much more significant reduction in the required HP required to generate that flow rate. This is the primary reason a two speed or variable speed pump can save so much energy at lower speeds.
For example, low speed of a two speed pump has about 1/2 the flow rate as high speed and the affinity equations tell us that it requires only 1/8th the power of high speed. Unfortunately, two speed motors lose about half their efficiency at low speed so the energy use is only about 1/4th of high speed but still significant. So even though low speed needs to run twice as long for the same turnover, it will still save over 50% in total energy.
Current generation variable speed pumps provide even more cost savings over their two speed counterparts. Plus, given the range in RPM settings, the pump can be optimized for the given pool plumbing. The flexibility of a variable speed pump ensures a maximum energy factor for nearly any operating condition.
Unlike two speed pumps, variable speed pumps can maintain fairly high efficiency at lower speeds thereby reducing the amount of energy consumed for a given head loss. A 3/4 HP full rated Whisperflo two speed pump has an energy factor of 6.3 gallons/watt-hr at low speed while the Intelliflo pump has an energy factor of over 10.3 gallons/watt-hr for same flow rate so the Intelliflo will save close to 40% more energy than the 2 speed. However, a VS costs more than a two speed pump so the cost difference could be more than the energy savings of the pump. For a small pool and low energy costs, a VS may not make sense and a two speed could end up being more cost effective over the life of the pump.
Pentair itself has a good video on it, but basically, this isn't a linear relationship. It doesn't take twice as much power to produce twice as much pumping power. It takes multiples of that so it's more of a geometric curve where the electricity needed at a higher power level increase faster than the power produced by the pump. Thus running a pump longer at lower power takes much less electricity than at a higher power for shorter periods of time.
Your understanding is based on a false premise - pools do not need a specific number of turnovers per day.
Also, as others have said, the relationship between pump power, water flow and electrical power is not linear. Read all about it here -
Hydraulics 101 - Have you lost your head?
The second component of head is dynamic head loss which is due to the friction loss of water inside of pipes, fittings and other equipment. As water travels through a pipe, the friction against the internal structures reduces pressure. A pool's plumbing system will experience dynamic head loss on both the suction side of the pump and return side of the pump since water is moving through pipes on both sides. The faster water moves through a pipe, the more head loss
Are there guidelines on how to optimize the pump speed with given demands (filtration, sanitation, etc.). Just trying to prepare if my PB is not up to programming the VS pump should I go that route.